Scott survived the religious and political oppression of both the East and the West. He was born in former Czechoslovakia (CZ). At 13, the CZ government and its Communist Party's State Secret Police (StB) began persecuting him for his religious studies and service in the RC Church. Initially, the government subjected him to its re-education program, then prohibited him from public education altogether, and finally forced him to perform hard manual labor while torturing and nearly killing him before he reached adulthood. Scott persevered and continued Theology and Scholastic Philosophy studies in the clandestine RC Church established by the Va…
Scott survived the religious and political oppression of both the East and the West. He was born in former Czechoslovakia (CZ). At 13, the CZ government and its Communist Party's State Secret Police (StB) began persecuting him for his religious studies and service in the RC Church. Initially, the government subjected him to its re-education program, then prohibited him from public education altogether, and finally forced him to perform hard manual labor while torturing and nearly killing him before he reached adulthood. Scott persevered and continued Theology and Scholastic Philosophy studies in the clandestine RC Church established by the Vatican, under the guidance of extraordinary religious leaders and preeminent professors, survivors of both the Nazi and the Communist forced labor camps, likewise expelled from the country's universities and public life. In 1989, Scott became a freelance journalist from behind the Iron Curtain and the youngest student leader on the front lines of the Velvet Revolution. His writings are available to researchers in the Stanford University Library Collections, US. Scott's sacrifices contributed to the toppling of the Communist Government in CZ and the Cold War demise in Eastern Europe.
After the CZ Government's complete collapse in November 1989, at the age of 19, Scott served as an adviser to the newly elected President of CZ, Havel. In December 1989, the President appointed him as his diplomatic representative and commissioned him to negotiate a cease-fire during the civil-military conflict in Timisoara and Bucharest with the President of Romania. In the fall of 1990, Scott officially commenced studies of Theology and Scholastic Philosophy at Charles University in Prague. In 1991, he was accepted by the New Mexico Military Institute, where he earned the black beret of the US Army (ROTC) Ranger Team and received a Liberal Arts Degree in 1993. After that, Scott continued advanced studies of Military Science and Diplomacy at the Military College of Vermont, Norwich University. At the same time, he worked as an Assistant Professor of Modern Languages at the Norwich University Russian School, where he established and taught a Summer Intensive Graduate Language Program. Several of Scott's former students became renowned professors at the US and Canadian Ivy League universities and other world's institutions. From 1996, Scott joined the US Skiing University as a Professional Ski Instructor in the Green Mountains of Vermont. In 1997, he started liberal arts studies at the Muhlenberg College in Pennsylvania and graduated with a Fine Arts Degree in 2000. From 2001, Scott attended Harvard University, studied Medical Sciences, and worked at the Harvard Medical School, Department of Medical Anthropology and Social Medicine. Moreover, he volunteered for the MSF – Physicians for Human Rights and mentored doctoral candidates in theology, philosophy, history, political science, political economy, international relations, and human rights.
While at Harvard University, on November 13, 2006, about six months after speaking up against the US government's war crimes in Afghanistan and Iraq, the US government DHS agents broke into Scott's Cambridge home, kidnapped him, extra-judicially detained and tortured him for 7.5 years, without any criminal charges or convictions, and attempted to murder him. When the public began protesting against these US Government's gross atrocities, the US DHS agents kidnapped Scott across international borders in 2014 and expected that by making Scott internationally displaced, far away from his home and family, and without the necessary medical care, he would finally succumb to the many life-threatening medical conditions and injuries they inflicted upon him.
In 2016, Scott was invited by the University of Tehran, where he studied the Persian Language; then by al-Mustafa University, where he received a graduate degree in Islamic Studies; and then by the University of Religions and Denominations, where he conducts doctorate-level research titled "Avicenna's Sufficientiae and Aquinas' Summae: On the Existence and Nature of God." He continues his academic career, teaching and researching comparative and political theology and philosophy, modern and ancient languages, and other fields. As a multi-disciplinary scientist, expert educator, charismatic public speaker, prominent public figure, and international human rights leader, he lectures as a distinguished visiting scholar at various universities and provides expert advice to academic research institutions worldwide.
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